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Source code for torch.fx.graph

# mypy: allow-untyped-defs
from collections import defaultdict
from .node import Node, Argument, Target, map_arg, _type_repr, _get_qualified_name
import torch.utils._pytree as pytree
from . import _pytree as fx_pytree
from ._compatibility import compatibility

import os
import contextlib
from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, Callable, Any, List, Dict, NamedTuple, Optional, Tuple, Set, FrozenSet, Type, Iterable
from dataclasses import dataclass
from contextlib import contextmanager
import copy
import enum
import torch
import keyword
import re
import builtins
import math
import warnings
import inspect

__all__ = ["PythonCode", "CodeGen", "Graph"]

if TYPE_CHECKING:
    from .graph_module import GraphModule  # noqa: F401
    from ._symbolic_trace import Tracer   # noqa: F401


# Mapping of builtins to their `typing` equivalent.
_origin_type_map = {
    list: List,
    dict: Dict,
    set: Set,
    frozenset: FrozenSet,
    tuple: Tuple,
}


# Signature for functions thattransforms the body (`list[str]`) of the
# generated code
TransformCodeFunc = Callable[[List[str]], List[str]]


class _CustomBuiltin(NamedTuple):
    """Additional objs that we add to every graph's globals.

    The repr() for some standard library objects is not valid Python code without
    an import. For common objects of this sort, we bundle them in the globals of
    every FX graph.
    """
    # How to import this object from the standard library.
    import_str: str
    # The actual object, produced from that import string.
    obj: Any

_custom_builtins: Dict[str, _CustomBuiltin] = {}


def _register_custom_builtin(name: str, import_str: str, obj: Any):
    _custom_builtins[name] = _CustomBuiltin(import_str, obj)


_register_custom_builtin('inf', 'from math import inf', math.inf)
_register_custom_builtin('nan', 'from math import nan', math.nan)
_register_custom_builtin('NoneType', 'NoneType = type(None)', type(None))
_register_custom_builtin('torch', 'import torch', torch)
_register_custom_builtin('device', 'from torch import device', torch.device)
_register_custom_builtin('fx_pytree', 'import torch.fx._pytree as fx_pytree', fx_pytree)
_register_custom_builtin('pytree', 'import torch.utils._pytree as pytree', pytree)


def _is_magic(x: str) -> bool:
    return x.startswith('__') and x.endswith('__')


def _snake_case(s: str) -> str:
    """
    Transforms the given string ``s`` to a Python-style variable name

    Examples:
        ``mod.snake_case`` -> ``mod.snake_case``
        ``mod.pascalCase``-> ``mod.pascal_case``
        ``mod.ALL_CAPS`` -> ``mod.all_caps``
    """
    chars = []
    prev_lower = False
    for c in s:
        if prev_lower and c.isupper():
            chars.append('_')
        chars.append(c.lower())
        prev_lower = c.islower()
    return ''.join(chars)


def _is_from_torch(obj: Any) -> bool:
    module_name = getattr(obj, '__module__', None)
    if module_name is not None:
        base_module = module_name.partition('.')[0]
        return (
            base_module == 'torch' and
            not module_name.startswith("torch._dynamo.") and
            not module_name.startswith("torch._inductor.")
        )

    name = getattr(obj, '__name__', None)
    # exclude torch because torch.torch.torch.torch works. idk mang
    if name is not None and name != 'torch':
        for guess in [torch, torch.nn.functional]:
            if getattr(guess, name, None) is obj:
                return True

    return False


class _Namespace:
    """A context for associating names uniquely with objects.

    The following invariants are enforced:
    - Each object gets a single name.
    - Each name is unique within a given namespace.
    - Names generated do not shadow builtins, unless the object is indeed that builtin.
    """
    def __init__(self):
        self._obj_to_name: Dict[Any, str] = {}
        self._unassociated_names = set()
        self._used_names: Set[str] = set()
        self._base_count: Dict[str, int] = defaultdict(int)

        self._illegal_char_regex = re.compile('[^0-9a-zA-Z_]+')
        self._name_suffix_regex = re.compile(r"(.*)_(\d+)$")

    def create_name(self, candidate: str, obj: Optional[Any]) -> str:
        """Create a unique name.

        Arguments:
            candidate: used as the basis for the unique name, relevant to the user.
            obj: If not None, an object that will be associated with the unique name.
        """
        if obj is not None and obj in self._obj_to_name:
            return self._obj_to_name[obj]

        # delete all characters that are illegal in a Python identifier
        candidate = self._illegal_char_regex.sub('_', candidate)

        if not candidate:
            candidate = '_unnamed'

        if candidate[0].isdigit():
            candidate = f'_{candidate}'

        match = self._name_suffix_regex.match(candidate)
        if match is None:
            base = candidate
            num = None
        else:
            base, num_str = match.group(1, 2)
            num = int(num_str)

        candidate = base if num is None else f'{base}_{num}'
        if not num:
            num = self._base_count[base]

        while candidate in self._used_names or self._is_illegal_name(candidate, obj):
            num += 1
            candidate = f'{base}_{num}'

        self._used_names.add(candidate)
        self._base_count[base] = num
        if obj is None:
            self._unassociated_names.add(candidate)
        else:
            self._obj_to_name[obj] = candidate
        return candidate

    def associate_name_with_obj(self, name: str, obj: Any):
        """Associate a unique name with an object.

        Neither `name` nor `obj` should be associated already.
        """
        assert obj not in self._obj_to_name
        assert name in self._unassociated_names
        self._obj_to_name[obj] = name
        self._unassociated_names.remove(name)

    def _is_illegal_name(self, name: str, obj: Any) -> bool:
        # 1. keywords are never allowed as names.
        if name in keyword.kwlist:
            return True

        # 2. Can't shadow a builtin name, unless you *are* that builtin.
        if name in builtins.__dict__:
            return obj is not builtins.__dict__[name]

        # 3. Can't shadow our custom builtins either
        if name in _custom_builtins:
            return obj is not _custom_builtins[name].obj

        return False

    def _rename_object(self, obj: Any, name: str):
        assert obj in self._obj_to_name
        self._obj_to_name[obj] = name
        self._used_names.add(name)

dtype_abbrs = {
    torch.bfloat16: 'bf16',
    torch.float64: 'f64',
    torch.float32: 'f32',
    torch.float16: 'f16',
    torch.float8_e4m3fn: 'f8e4m3fn',
    torch.float8_e5m2: 'f8e5m2',
    torch.float8_e4m3fnuz: 'f8e4m3fnuz',
    torch.float8_e5m2fnuz: 'f8e5m2fnuz',
    torch.complex32: 'c32',
    torch.complex64: 'c64',
    torch.complex128: 'c128',
    torch.int8: 'i8',
    torch.int16: 'i16',
    torch.int32: 'i32',
    torch.int64: 'i64',
    torch.bool: 'b8',
    torch.uint8: 'u8',
    torch.uint32: 'u32',
    torch.uint64: 'u64',
}

@compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True)
@dataclass
class PythonCode:
    """
    Represents all the information necessary to exec or save a graph as Python code.
    """
    # Python source code for the forward function definition.
    src: str
    # Values in global scope during execution of `src_def`.
    globals: Dict[str, Any]
    # Optional mapping from the forward function's line number to
    # node index.
    _lineno_map: Optional[Dict[int, Optional[int]]]


def _format_target(base: str, target: str) -> str:
    elems = target.split('.')
    r = base
    for e in elems:
        if not e.isidentifier():
            r = f'getattr({r}, "{e}")'
        else:
            r = f'{r}.{e}'
    return r

class _InsertPoint:
    def __init__(self, graph, new_insert):
        self.graph = graph
        self.orig_insert, graph._insert = graph._insert, new_insert

    def __enter__(self):
        pass

    def __exit__(self, type, value, tb):
        self.graph._insert = self.orig_insert

class _node_list:
    def __init__(self, graph: 'Graph', direction: str = '_next'):
        assert direction in ['_next', '_prev']
        self.graph = graph
        self.direction = direction

    def __len__(self):
        return self.graph._len

    def __iter__(self):
        root = self.graph._root
        if self.direction == "_next":
            cur = root._next
            while cur is not root:
                if not cur._erased:
                    yield cur
                cur = cur._next
        else:
            assert self.direction == "_prev"
            cur = root._prev
            while cur is not root:
                if not cur._erased:
                    yield cur
                cur = cur._prev

    def __reversed__(self):
        return _node_list(self.graph, '_next' if self.direction == '_prev' else '_prev')

class _PyTreeInfo(NamedTuple):
    """
    Contains extra info stored when we're using Pytrees
    """
    orig_args: List[str]
    in_spec: pytree.TreeSpec
    out_spec: Optional[pytree.TreeSpec]

@dataclass(frozen=True)
class _ParsedStackTrace:
    """
    Represents the top-most frame of a parsed stack trace
    """
    file: str
    lineno: str
    name: str
    code: str

    def get_summary_str(self):
        return f'File: {self.file}:{self.lineno} in {self.name}, code: {self.code}'

# get File:lineno code from stack_trace
def _parse_stack_trace(stack_trace: str):
    if stack_trace is None:
        return None
    pattern = re.compile(r"^File \"(.+)\", line (\d+), in (.+)$")
    lines = stack_trace.strip().split('\n')
    # stacktrace should have innermost frame last, so we
    # iterate backwards to find the first line that starts
    # with 'File '
    summary_str = ""
    for idx in range(len(lines) - 2, -1, -1):
        line = lines[idx].strip()
        matches = pattern.match(line)
        if matches:
            file = matches.group(1)
            lineno = matches.group(2)
            name = matches.group(3)
            # next line should be the code
            code = lines[idx + 1].strip()
            return _ParsedStackTrace(file, lineno, name, code)
    return None

@compatibility(is_backward_compatible=False)
class CodeGen:
    def __init__(self):
        self._body_transformer: Optional[TransformCodeFunc] = None
        self._func_name: str = "forward"

    def gen_fn_def(self, free_vars: List[str], maybe_return_annotation: str) -> str:
        """
        Given the free variables and a return annotation, generates the beginning of the FX function.
        By default, `gen_fn_def(['a', 'b'], '') == 'def {self._func_name}(a, b):'`
        """
        # If the original function didn't have self as its first argument, we
        # would have added it.
        if len(free_vars) == 0 or free_vars[0] != 'self':
            free_vars.insert(0, 'self')
        return f"def {self._func_name}({', '.join(free_vars)}){maybe_return_annotation}:"

    def generate_output(self, output_args: Argument) -> str:
        """
        Given the output arguments, generates the return statement of the FX function.
        Note: The returned statement should not be indented.
        """
        return f'return {repr(output_args)}'

    def process_inputs(self, *args: Any) -> Any:
        """
        Transforms the inputs so that the graph can take them as arguments, as
        non-default codegen may result in the inputs to the function being
        different from the inputs to the graph.

        If the graph was directly runnable, this invariant should hold true
        `f.graph.process_outputs(f.graph(*f.graph.process_inputs(*inputs))) == f(*inputs)`
        """
        return args

    def process_outputs(self, outputs: Any) -> Any:
        """
        Transforms the outputs of the graph to be identical to the codegen.

        See ``process_inputs`` for more details.
        """
        return outputs

    def additional_globals(self) -> List[Tuple[str, Any]]:
        """
        If your codegen uses extra global values, add tuples of (identifier,reference to the value) here.
        For example, return ['List', typing.List] if you need ``List`` in the global context.
        """
        return []

    def _gen_python_code(
        self, nodes, root_module: str, namespace: _Namespace, *,
        verbose: bool = False, include_stride: bool = False, include_device: bool = False
    ) -> PythonCode:
        free_vars: List[str] = []
        body: List[str] = []
        globals_: Dict[str, Any] = {}
        wrapped_fns: Dict[str, None] = {}

        # Wrap string in list to pass by reference
        maybe_return_annotation : List[str] = ['']
        include_stride = include_stride or (os.environ.get("FX_GRAPH_SHOW_STRIDE", "0") == "1")
        include_device = include_device or (os.environ.get("FX_GRAPH_SHOW_DEVICE", "0") == "1")

        def add_global(name_hint: str, obj: Any):
            """Add an obj to be tracked as a global.

            We call this for names that reference objects external to the
            Graph, like functions or types.

            Returns: the global name that should be used to reference 'obj' in generated source.
            """
            if _is_from_torch(obj) and obj != torch.device:  # to support registering torch.device
                # HACK: workaround for how torch custom ops are registered. We
                # can't import them like normal modules so they must retain their
                # fully qualified name.
                return _get_qualified_name(obj)

            # normalize the name hint to get a proper identifier
            global_name = namespace.create_name(name_hint, obj)

            if global_name in globals_:
                assert globals_[global_name] is obj
                return global_name
            globals_[global_name] = obj
            return global_name

        # Pre-fill the globals table with registered builtins.
        for name, (_, obj) in _custom_builtins.items():
            add_global(name, obj)

        def type_repr(o : Any):
            if o == ():
                # Empty tuple is used for empty tuple type annotation Tuple[()]
                return '()'

            typename = _type_repr(o)

            if hasattr(o, '__origin__'):
                # This is a generic type, e.g. typing.List[torch.Tensor]
                origin_type = _origin_type_map.get(o.__origin__, o.__origin__)
                origin_typename = add_global(_type_repr(origin_type), origin_type)

                if hasattr(o, '__args__'):
                    # Assign global names for each of the inner type variables.
                    args = [type_repr(arg) for arg in o.__args__]

                    if len(args) == 0:
                        # Bare type, such as `typing.Tuple` with no subscript
                        # This code-path used in Python < 3.9
                        return origin_typename

                    return f'{origin_typename}[{",".join(args)}]'
                else:
                    # Bare type, such as `typing.Tuple` with no subscript
                    # This code-path used in Python 3.9+
                    return origin_typename

            # Common case: this is a regular module name like 'foo.bar.baz'
            return add_global(typename, o)

        def _get_repr(arg: Any) -> str:
            # Handle NamedTuples (if it has `_fields`) via add_global.
            if isinstance(arg, tuple) and hasattr(arg, '_fields'):
                qualified_name = _get_qualified_name(type(arg))
                global_name = add_global(qualified_name, type(arg))
                return f"{global_name}{repr(tuple(arg))}"
            elif isinstance(arg, torch._ops.OpOverload):
                qualified_name = _get_qualified_name(arg)
                global_name = add_global(qualified_name, arg)
                return f"{global_name}"
            elif isinstance(arg, enum.Enum):
                cls = arg.__class__
                clsname = add_global(cls.__name__, cls)
                return f"{clsname}.{arg.name}"
            return repr(arg)

        def _format_args(args: Tuple[Argument, ...], kwargs: Dict[str, Argument]) -> str:
            args_s = ', '.join(_get_repr(a) for a in args)
            kwargs_s = ', '.join(f'{k} = {_get_repr(v)}' for k, v in kwargs.items())
            if args_s and kwargs_s:
                return f'{args_s}, {kwargs_s}'
            return args_s or kwargs_s

        # Run through reverse nodes and record the first instance of a use
        # of a given node. This represents the *last* use of the node in the
        # execution order of the program, which we will use to free unused
        # values
        node_to_last_use : Dict[Node, Node] = {}
        user_to_last_uses : Dict[Node, List[Node]] = {}

        def register_last_uses(n : Node, user : Node):
            if n not in node_to_last_use:
                node_to_last_use[n] = user
                user_to_last_uses.setdefault(user, []).append(n)

        for node in reversed(nodes):
            map_arg(node.args, lambda n: register_last_uses(n, node))
            map_arg(node.kwargs, lambda n: register_last_uses(n, node))

        def delete_unused_values(user : Node):
            """
            Delete values after their last use. This ensures that values that are
            not used in the remainder of the code are freed and the memory usage
            of the code is optimal.
            """
            if user.op == 'placeholder':
                return
            if user.op == 'output':
                body.append('\n')
                return
            nodes_to_delete = user_to_last_uses.get(user, [])
            if len(nodes_to_delete):
                to_delete_str = ' = '.join([repr(n) for n in nodes_to_delete] + ['None'])
                body.append(f';  {to_delete_str}\n')
            else:
                body.append('\n')

        prev_stacktrace = None

        def append_stacktrace_summary(node : Node):
            """
            Append a summary of the stacktrace to the generated code. This is
            useful for debugging.
            """
            nonlocal prev_stacktrace

            if node.op not in {'placeholder', 'output'}:
                if node.stack_trace:
                    if node.stack_trace != prev_stacktrace:
                        prev_stacktrace = node.stack_trace
                        summary_str = ""

                        if parsed_stack_trace := _parse_stack_trace(node.stack_trace):
                            summary_str = parsed_stack_trace.get_summary_str()

                        body.append(f'\n# {summary_str}\n')
                elif prev_stacktrace != "":
                    prev_stacktrace = ""
                    body.append('\n# No stacktrace found for following nodes\n')

        def stringify_shape(shape : Iterable) -> str:
            return f"[{', '.join(str(x) for x in shape)}]"

        def emit_node(node : Node):
            maybe_type_annotation = '' if node.type is None else f' : {type_repr(node.type)}'

            if verbose:
                # override annotation with more detailed information
                from torch._subclasses.fake_tensor import FakeTensor
                from torch.fx.experimental.proxy_tensor import py_sym_types
                from torch.fx.passes.shape_prop import TensorMetadata

                meta_val = node.meta.get('val', node.meta.get('tensor_meta', node.meta.get('example_value', None)))
                # use string as annotation, to make it valid python code
                if isinstance(meta_val, FakeTensor):
                    stride_annotation = f"{stringify_shape(meta_val.stride())}" if include_stride else ""
                    device_annotation = f"{meta_val.device}" if include_device else ""
                    maybe_type_annotation = \
                        f': "{dtype_abbrs[meta_val.dtype]}{stringify_shape(meta_val.shape)}' \
                        f'{stride_annotation}{device_annotation}"'
                elif isinstance(meta_val, py_sym_types):
                    maybe_type_annotation = f': "Sym({meta_val})"'
                elif isinstance(meta_val, TensorMetadata):
                    maybe_type_annotation = f': "{dtype_abbrs[meta_val.dtype]}{stringify_shape(meta_val.shape)}"'

            if node.op == 'placeholder':
                assert isinstance(node.target, str)
                maybe_default_arg = '' if not node.args else f' = {_get_repr(node.args[0])}'
                free_vars.append(f'{node.target}{maybe_type_annotation}{maybe_default_arg}')
                raw_name = node.target.replace('*', '')
                if raw_name != repr(node):
                    body.append(f'{repr(node)} = {raw_name}\n')
                return
            elif node.op == 'call_method':
                assert isinstance(node.target, str)
                body.append(
                    f'{repr(node)}{maybe_type_annotation} = {_format_target(_get_repr(node.args[0]), node.target)}'
                    f'({_format_args(node.args[1:], node.kwargs)})')
                return
            elif node.op == 'call_function':
                assert callable(node.target)
                # pretty print operators
                if getattr(node.target, "__module__", "") == '_operator' and node.target.__name__ in magic_methods:
                    assert isinstance(node.args, tuple)
                    body.append(f'{repr(node)}{maybe_type_annotation} = '
                                f'{magic_methods[node.target.__name__].format(*(_get_repr(a) for a in node.args))}')
                    return

                # pretty print inplace operators; required for jit.script to work properly
                # not currently supported in normal FX graphs, but generated by torchdynamo
                if getattr(node.target, "__module__", "") == '_operator' and node.target.__name__ in inplace_methods:
                    body.append(f'{inplace_methods[node.target.__name__].format(*(_get_repr(a) for a in node.args))};  '
                                f'{repr(node)}{maybe_type_annotation} = {_get_repr(node.args[0])}')
                    return

                qualified_name = _get_qualified_name(node.target)
                global_name = add_global(qualified_name, node.target)
                # special case for getattr: node.args could be 2-argument or 3-argument
                # 2-argument: attribute access; 3-argument: fall through to attrib function call with default value
                if global_name == 'getattr' and \
                   isinstance(node.args, tuple) and \
                   isinstance(node.args[1], str) and \
                   node.args[1].isidentifier() and \
                   len(node.args) == 2:
                    body.append(f'{repr(node)}{maybe_type_annotation} = {_format_target(_get_repr(node.args[0]), node.args[1])}')
                    return
                body.append(f'{repr(node)}{maybe_type_annotation} = {global_name}({_format_args(node.args, node.kwargs)})')
                if node.meta.get('is_wrapped', False):
                    wrapped_fns.setdefault(global_name)
                return
            elif node.op == 'call_module':
                assert isinstance(node.target, str)
                body.append(f'{repr(node)}{maybe_type_annotation} = '
                            f'{_format_target(root_module, node.target)}({_format_args(node.args, node.kwargs)})')
                return
            elif node.op == 'get_attr':
                assert isinstance(node.target, str)
                body.append(f'{repr(node)}{maybe_type_annotation} = {_format_target(root_module, node.target)}')
                return
            elif node.op == 'output':
                if node.type is not None:
                    maybe_return_annotation[0] = f" -> {type_repr(node.type)}"
                body.append(self.generate_output(node.args[0]))
                return
            raise NotImplementedError(f'node: {node.op} {node.target}')

        for i, node in enumerate(nodes):
            # NOTE: emit_node does not emit a string with newline. It depends
            # on delete_unused_values to append one
            if verbose:
                append_stacktrace_summary(node)
            # emit a counter comment to keep track of
            # node index, which will be deleted later
            # after going through _body_transformer
            body.append(f"# COUNTER: {i}\n")
            emit_node(node)
            delete_unused_values(node)

        if len(body) == 0:
            # If the Graph has no non-placeholder nodes, no lines for the body
            # have been emitted. To continue to have valid Python code, emit a
            # single pass statement
            body.append('pass\n')



        if len(wrapped_fns) > 0:
            wrap_name = add_global('wrap', torch.fx.wrap)
            wrap_stmts = '\n'.join([f'{wrap_name}("{name}")' for name in wrapped_fns])
        else:
            wrap_stmts = ''

        if self._body_transformer:
            body = self._body_transformer(body)

        for name, value in self.additional_globals():
            add_global(name, value)

        prologue = self.gen_fn_def(free_vars, maybe_return_annotation[0])

        # remove counter and generate lineno to node index mapping
        lineno_map: Dict[int, Optional[int]] = {}
        prologue_len = prologue.count('\n') + 1
        new_lines: List[str] = []
        cur_idx = None
        for line in ''.join(body).split('\n'):
            counter = re.search(r"# COUNTER: (\d+)", line)
            if counter and counter.group(1) is not None:
                cur_idx = int(counter.group(1))
            else:
                lineno_map[len(new_lines) + prologue_len] = cur_idx
                new_lines.append(line)

        code = "\n".join(new_lines).lstrip('\n')
        code = '\n'.join('    ' + line for line in code.split('\n'))

        fn_code = f"""
{wrap_stmts}

{prologue}
{code}"""
        return PythonCode(fn_code, globals_, _lineno_map=lineno_map)


# Ideally, we'd like to refactor all of the pytree logic into this codegen
# class. Unfortunately, there are 3 areas we currently need extra logic in FX.
# 1. In the initial symbolic trace, the pytree logic is tied up with `concrete_args`.
# 2. In the FX graph, we need to access 2 attributes - in_spec and out_spec.
#    Since we can't access .graph within the FX forward, we need to copy the attribute to the module.
# 3. We currently can't register the pytree imports with `add_global` - not sure why.
class _PyTreeCodeGen(CodeGen):
    def __init__(self, pytree_info: _PyTreeInfo):
        super().__init__()
        self.pytree_info: _PyTreeInfo = pytree_info

    def process_inputs(self, *inputs: Any) -> Any:
        flat_args = pytree.arg_tree_leaves(*inputs)
        return flat_args

    def process_outputs(self, out: Any) -> Any:
        if self.pytree_info is None or self.pytree_info.out_spec is None:
            return out
        if not isinstance(out, (list, tuple)):
            out = [out]
        assert self.pytree_info.out_spec is not None
        return pytree.tree_unflatten(out, self.pytree_info.out_spec)

    def gen_fn_def(self, free_vars, maybe_return_annotation):
        # Given a user function/model:
        #   myargs = [myargs0, myargs1]
        #   mykwargs = {'mykwargs0': ..., 'mykwargs1': ...}
        #   def forward(self, mypos, *myargs, mykey=None, **mykwargs):
        #
        # The generated code flattens all keywords into positional arguments for `forward()`
        #   e.g forward(self, mypos, myargs0, myargs1, mykey, mykwargs0, mykwargs1):
        #
        # Within `forward`, `tree_flatten_spec``still parses args and kwargs separately
        #   e.g. tree_flatten_spec(([mypos, myargs0, myargs1],
        #                           {'mykey':mykey, 'mykwargs0':mykwargs0, 'mykwargs1':mykwargs1}),
        #                          self._in_spec)
        #
        # If the user function/model does not have keywords, the dict is suppressed from tree_flatten_spec
        #   e.g. tree_flatten_spec([mypos, myargs0, myargs1]), self._in_spec)
        if self.pytree_info is None:
            return super().gen_fn_def(free_vars, maybe_return_annotation)

        fn_args = self.pytree_info.orig_args
        has_orig_self = (fn_args[0] == 'self') if len(fn_args) > 0 else False
        if has_orig_self:
            free_vars.insert(0, 'self')
        fn_definition = super().gen_fn_def(fn_args[:], maybe_return_annotation)

        if len(free_vars) > 0:  # pytree has placeholders in it
            # when kwargs is present, in_spec is tuple(args, kwargs)
            has_args_kwargs_tuple = self.pytree_info.in_spec.type == tuple and \
                self.pytree_info.in_spec.num_children == 2 and \
                self.pytree_info.in_spec.children_specs[0].type == tuple and \
                self.pytree_info.in_spec.children_specs[1].type == dict
            fn_kwargs = '{}'
            fn_signature = f"[{', '.join(fn_args)}], self._in_spec"
            if has_args_kwargs_tuple:
                count_args = self.pytree_info.in_spec.children_specs[0].num_children
                fn_args = self.pytree_info.orig_args[:count_args]
                fn_kwargs = '{' + ', '.join(f"'{k}':{v}" for k, v in zip(
                                  self.pytree_info.in_spec.children_specs[1].context,
                                  self.pytree_info.orig_args[count_args:])) + '}'
                fn_signature = f"([{', '.join(fn_args)}], {fn_kwargs}), self._in_spec"

            # in Python, `var1: annotation1, var2: annotation2 = function_call()` is invalid.
            # we need to split it to two lines:
            # one for annotation: `var1: annotation1; var2: annotation2;` (note the semicolon)
            # one for code: `var1, var2, = function_call()`
            without_annotation = [x.split(":")[0] for x in free_vars]
            has_annotation = [x + "; " for x in free_vars if ":" in x]
            if len(has_annotation) > 0:
                fn_definition += "\n    " + "".join(has_annotation) + "\n"
            fn_definition += f"""
    {', '.join(without_annotation)}, = fx_pytree.tree_flatten_spec({fn_signature})"""
        return fn_definition

    def generate_output(self, output_args):
        if self.pytree_info and self.pytree_info.out_spec:
            return f'return pytree.tree_unflatten({repr(output_args)}, self._out_spec)'
        else:
            return super().generate_output(output_args)

class _FindNodesLookupTable:
    """
    Side table for the graph for the purpose of doing fast queries
    """
    def __init__(self):
        self.table: Dict[Tuple[str, Optional[Target]], Dict[Node, None]] = defaultdict(dict)

    def _key(self, node) -> Tuple[str, Optional[Target]]:
        return (node.op, node.target if node.op == "call_function" else None)

    def __contains__(self, node) -> bool:
        return node in self.table[self._key(node)]

    def insert(self, node: Node) -> None:
        self.table[self._key(node)][node] = None

    def remove(self, node: Node) -> None:
        self.table[self._key(node)].pop(node)

    def find_nodes(self, *, op: str, target: Optional['Target'] = None):
        if op == "call_function":
            assert target is not None
            return dict(self.table[(op, target)]).keys()

        if target is None:
            return dict(self.table[(op, None)]).keys()

        # op is call_method, get_attr, call_module
        return [node for node in self.table[(op, None)].keys() if node.target == target]

[docs]@compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) class Graph: """ ``Graph`` is the main data structure used in the FX Intermediate Representation. It consists of a series of ``Node`` s, each representing callsites (or other syntactic constructs). The list of ``Node`` s, taken together, constitute a valid Python function. For example, the following code .. code-block:: python import torch import torch.fx class MyModule(torch.nn.Module): def __init__(self): super().__init__() self.param = torch.nn.Parameter(torch.rand(3, 4)) self.linear = torch.nn.Linear(4, 5) def forward(self, x): return torch.topk(torch.sum(self.linear(x + self.linear.weight).relu(), dim=-1), 3) m = MyModule() gm = torch.fx.symbolic_trace(m) Will produce the following Graph:: print(gm.graph) .. code-block:: text graph(x): %linear_weight : [num_users=1] = self.linear.weight %add_1 : [num_users=1] = call_function[target=operator.add](args = (%x, %linear_weight), kwargs = {}) %linear_1 : [num_users=1] = call_module[target=linear](args = (%add_1,), kwargs = {}) %relu_1 : [num_users=1] = call_method[target=relu](args = (%linear_1,), kwargs = {}) %sum_1 : [num_users=1] = call_function[target=torch.sum](args = (%relu_1,), kwargs = {dim: -1}) %topk_1 : [num_users=1] = call_function[target=torch.topk](args = (%sum_1, 3), kwargs = {}) return topk_1 For the semantics of operations represented in the ``Graph``, please see :class:`Node`. """
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def __init__(self, owning_module: Optional["GraphModule"] = None, tracer_cls: Optional[Type["Tracer"]] = None, tracer_extras: Optional[Dict[str, Any]] = None): """ Construct an empty Graph. """ self._root : Node = Node(self, '', 'root', '', (), {}) self._used_names : Dict[str, int] = {} # base name -> number self._insert = self._root.prepend self._len = 0 self._graph_namespace = _Namespace() self._owning_module = owning_module self._tracer_cls = tracer_cls self._tracer_extras = tracer_extras self._codegen = CodeGen() self._co_fields : Dict[str, Any] = {} self._find_nodes_lookup_table = _FindNodesLookupTable()
@property def owning_module(self): return self._owning_module @owning_module.setter def owning_module(self, mod: Optional["GraphModule"]): self._owning_module = mod @property def nodes(self) -> _node_list: """ Get the list of Nodes that constitute this Graph. Note that this ``Node`` list representation is a doubly-linked list. Mutations during iteration (e.g. delete a Node, add a Node) are safe. Returns: A doubly-linked list of Nodes. Note that ``reversed`` can be called on this list to switch iteration order. """ return _node_list(self)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=False) def find_nodes(self, *, op: str, target: Optional['Target'] = None, sort: bool = True): """ Allows for fast query of nodes Args: op (str): the name of the operation target (Optional[Target]): the target of the node. For call_function, the target is required. For other ops, the target is optional. sort (bool): whether to return nodes in the order they appear on on the graph. Returns: Iteratable of nodes with the requested op and target. """ node_list = self._find_nodes_lookup_table.find_nodes(op=op, target=target) if sort: return sorted(node_list) return node_list
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def graph_copy(self, g : 'Graph', val_map : Dict[Node, Node], return_output_node=False) -> 'Optional[Argument]': """ Copy all nodes from a given graph into ``self``. Args: g (Graph): The source graph from which to copy Nodes. val_map (Dict[Node, Node]): a dictionary that will be populated with a mapping from nodes in ``g`` to nodes in ``self``. Note that ``val_map`` can be passed in with values in it already to override copying of certain values. Returns: The value in ``self`` that is now equivalent to the output value in ``g``, if ``g`` had an ``output`` node. ``None`` otherwise. """ for node in g.nodes: if node in val_map: continue if node.op == 'output': rv = map_arg(node.args[0], lambda n: val_map[n]) return rv if not return_output_node else (rv, node) val_map[node] = self.node_copy(node, lambda n : val_map[n]) return None
def __deepcopy__(self, memo=None) -> 'Graph': """ Explicitly implement __deepcopy__ to prevent excessive recursion depth from the default implementation. This uses graph_copy to copy the nodes in an iterative way, rather than recursive. It also populates the memoization table to prevent unnecessary copies (e.g. references to nodes or other parts of the Graph from a custom GraphModule implementation. """ memo = memo if memo else {} g = Graph(tracer_cls=self._tracer_cls) output_vals = g.graph_copy(self, val_map=memo, return_output_node=True) g._codegen = copy.deepcopy(self._codegen) assert isinstance(output_vals, tuple) output_val, old_output_node = output_vals new_output_node = g.output(output_val, type_expr=getattr(old_output_node, 'type', None)) new_output_node.meta = copy.copy(old_output_node.meta) return g
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def create_node(self, op: str, target: 'Target', args: Optional[Tuple['Argument', ...]] = None, kwargs: Optional[Dict[str, 'Argument']] = None, name: Optional[str] = None, type_expr: Optional[Any] = None) -> Node: """ Create a ``Node`` and add it to the ``Graph`` at the current insert-point. Note that the current insert-point can be set via :meth:`Graph.inserting_before` and :meth:`Graph.inserting_after`. Args: op (str): the opcode for this Node. One of 'call_function', 'call_method', 'get_attr', 'call_module', 'placeholder', or 'output'. The semantics of these opcodes are described in the ``Graph`` docstring. args (Optional[Tuple[Argument, ...]]): is a tuple of arguments to this node. kwargs (Optional[Dict[str, Argument]]): the kwargs of this Node name (Optional[str]): an optional string name for the ``Node``. This will influence the name of the value assigned to in the Python generated code. type_expr (Optional[Any]): an optional type annotation representing the Python type the output of this node will have. Returns: The newly-created and inserted node. """ assert op in ('call_function', 'call_method', 'get_attr', 'call_module', 'placeholder', 'output') args = () if args is None else args kwargs = {} if kwargs is None else kwargs assert isinstance(args, tuple), "args must be a tuple" assert isinstance(kwargs, dict), "kwargs must be a dict" candidate = name if name is not None else self._target_to_str(target) name = self._graph_namespace.create_name(candidate, None) n = Node(self, name, op, target, args, kwargs, type_expr) if self.owning_module is not None and getattr(self.owning_module, "_create_node_hooks", None) is not None: for f in self.owning_module._create_node_hooks: f(n) self._graph_namespace.associate_name_with_obj(name, n) self._insert(n) self._find_nodes_lookup_table.insert(n) self._len += 1 return n
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=False) def process_inputs(self, *args): """ Processes args so that they can be passed to the FX graph. """ return self._codegen.process_inputs(*args)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=False) def process_outputs(self, out): return self._codegen.process_outputs(out)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def erase_node(self, to_erase : Node) -> None: """ Erases a ``Node`` from the ``Graph``. Throws an exception if there are still users of that node in the ``Graph``. Args: to_erase (Node): The ``Node`` to erase from the ``Graph``. """ if len(to_erase.users) > 0: raise RuntimeError(f'Tried to erase Node {to_erase} but it still had {len(to_erase.users)} ' f'users in the graph: {to_erase.users}!') if to_erase.graph != self: raise RuntimeError(f"Attempting to remove {to_erase} from wrong graph!") if to_erase._erased: warnings.warn(f"erase_node({to_erase}) on an already erased node") return if self.owning_module is not None and getattr(self.owning_module, "_erase_node_hooks", None) is not None: for f in self.owning_module._erase_node_hooks: f(to_erase) self._find_nodes_lookup_table.remove(to_erase) to_erase._remove_from_list() to_erase._erased = True # iterators may retain handles to erased nodes self._len -= 1 # Null out this Node's argument nodes so that the Nodes referred to # can update their ``users`` accordingly new_args = map_arg(to_erase.args, lambda n: None) assert isinstance(new_args, tuple) to_erase.args = new_args new_kwargs = map_arg(to_erase.kwargs, lambda n: None) assert isinstance(new_kwargs, dict) to_erase.kwargs = new_kwargs
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def inserting_before(self, n: Optional[Node] = None): """Set the point at which create_node and companion methods will insert into the graph. When used within a 'with' statement, this will temporary set the insert point and then restore it when the with statement exits:: with g.inserting_before(n): ... # inserting before node n ... # insert point restored to what it was previously g.inserting_before(n) # set the insert point permanently Args: n (Optional[Node]): The node before which to insert. If None this will insert before the beginning of the entire graph. Returns: A resource manager that will restore the insert point on ``__exit__``. """ if n is None: return self.inserting_after(self._root) assert n.graph == self, "Node to insert before is not in graph." return _InsertPoint(self, n.prepend)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def inserting_after(self, n: Optional[Node] = None): """Set the point at which create_node and companion methods will insert into the graph. When used within a 'with' statement, this will temporary set the insert point and then restore it when the with statement exits:: with g.inserting_after(n): ... # inserting after node n ... # insert point restored to what it was previously g.inserting_after(n) # set the insert point permanently Args: n (Optional[Node]): The node before which to insert. If None this will insert after the beginning of the entire graph. Returns: A resource manager that will restore the insert point on ``__exit__``. """ if n is None: return self.inserting_before(self._root) assert n.graph == self, "Node to insert after is not in graph." return _InsertPoint(self, n.append)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def placeholder(self, name: str, type_expr: Optional[Any] = None, default_value : Any = inspect.Signature.empty) -> Node: """ Insert a ``placeholder`` node into the Graph. A ``placeholder`` represents a function input. Args: name (str): A name for the input value. This corresponds to the name of the positional argument to the function this ``Graph`` represents. type_expr (Optional[Any]): an optional type annotation representing the Python type the output of this node will have. This is needed in some cases for proper code generation (e.g. when the function is used subsequently in TorchScript compilation). default_value (Any): The default value this function argument should take on. NOTE: to allow for `None` as a default value, `inspect.Signature.empty` should be passed as this argument to specify that the parameter does _not_ have a default value. .. note:: The same insertion point and type expression rules apply for this method as ``Graph.create_node``. """ args = () if default_value is inspect.Signature.empty else (default_value,) return self.create_node('placeholder', name, args=args, type_expr=type_expr)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def get_attr(self, qualified_name: str, type_expr: Optional[Any] = None) -> Node: """ Insert a ``get_attr`` node into the Graph. A ``get_attr`` ``Node`` represents the fetch of an attribute from the ``Module`` hierarchy. Args: qualified_name (str): the fully-qualified name of the attribute to be retrieved. For example, if the traced Module has a submodule named ``foo``, which has a submodule named ``bar``, which has an attribute named ``baz``, the qualified name ``foo.bar.baz`` should be passed as ``qualified_name``. type_expr (Optional[Any]): an optional type annotation representing the Python type the output of this node will have. Returns: The newly-created and inserted ``get_attr`` node. .. note:: The same insertion point and type expression rules apply for this method as ``Graph.create_node``. """ def _get_attr_reference_exists(mod: torch.nn.Module, qualified_name: str) -> bool: module_path, _, name = qualified_name.rpartition(".") try: submod: torch.nn.Module = mod.get_submodule(module_path) except AttributeError: warnings.warn(f"Failed to fetch module {module_path}!") return False if not hasattr(submod, name): return False res = getattr(submod, name) if (not isinstance(res, torch.nn.Module) and not isinstance(res, torch.nn.Parameter) and name not in submod._buffers): return False return True if (self.owning_module and not _get_attr_reference_exists(self.owning_module, qualified_name)): warnings.warn("Attempted to insert a get_attr Node with no " "underlying reference in the owning " "GraphModule! Call " "GraphModule.add_submodule to add the " "necessary submodule, " "GraphModule.add_parameter to add the " "necessary Parameter, or " "nn.Module.register_buffer to add the " "necessary buffer", stacklevel=2) return self.create_node('get_attr', qualified_name, type_expr=type_expr)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def call_module(self, module_name: str, args: Optional[Tuple['Argument', ...]] = None, kwargs: Optional[Dict[str, 'Argument']] = None, type_expr: Optional[Any] = None) -> Node: """ Insert a ``call_module`` ``Node`` into the ``Graph``. A ``call_module`` node represents a call to the forward() function of a ``Module`` in the ``Module`` hierarchy. Args: module_name (str): The qualified name of the ``Module`` in the ``Module`` hierarchy to be called. For example, if the traced ``Module`` has a submodule named ``foo``, which has a submodule named ``bar``, the qualified name ``foo.bar`` should be passed as ``module_name`` to call that module. args (Optional[Tuple[Argument, ...]]): The positional arguments to be passed to the called method. Note that this should *not* include a ``self`` argument. kwargs (Optional[Dict[str, Argument]]): The keyword arguments to be passed to the called method type_expr (Optional[Any]): an optional type annotation representing the Python type the output of this node will have. Returns: The newly-created and inserted ``call_module`` node. .. note:: The same insertion point and type expression rules apply for this method as :meth:`Graph.create_node`. """ if (self.owning_module and self.owning_module.get_submodule(module_name) is None): warnings.warn("Attempted to insert a call_module Node with " "no underlying reference in the owning " "GraphModule! Call " "GraphModule.add_submodule to add the " "necessary submodule") return self.create_node('call_module', module_name, args, kwargs, type_expr=type_expr)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def call_method(self, method_name: str, args: Optional[Tuple['Argument', ...]] = None, kwargs: Optional[Dict[str, 'Argument']] = None, type_expr: Optional[Any] = None) -> Node: """ Insert a ``call_method`` ``Node`` into the ``Graph``. A ``call_method`` node represents a call to a given method on the 0th element of ``args``. Args: method_name (str): The name of the method to apply to the self argument. For example, if args[0] is a ``Node`` representing a ``Tensor``, then to call ``relu()`` on that ``Tensor``, pass ``relu`` to ``method_name``. args (Optional[Tuple[Argument, ...]]): The positional arguments to be passed to the called method. Note that this *should* include a ``self`` argument. kwargs (Optional[Dict[str, Argument]]): The keyword arguments to be passed to the called method type_expr (Optional[Any]): an optional type annotation representing the Python type the output of this node will have. Returns: The newly created and inserted ``call_method`` node. .. note:: The same insertion point and type expression rules apply for this method as :meth:`Graph.create_node`. """ return self.create_node('call_method', method_name, args, kwargs, type_expr=type_expr)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def call_function(self, the_function: Callable[..., Any], args: Optional[Tuple['Argument', ...]] = None, kwargs: Optional[Dict[str, 'Argument']] = None, type_expr: Optional[Any] = None) -> Node: """ Insert a ``call_function`` ``Node`` into the ``Graph``. A ``call_function`` node represents a call to a Python callable, specified by ``the_function``. Args: the_function (Callable[..., Any]): The function to be called. Can be any PyTorch operator, Python function, or member of the ``builtins`` or ``operator`` namespaces. args (Optional[Tuple[Argument, ...]]): The positional arguments to be passed to the called function. kwargs (Optional[Dict[str, Argument]]): The keyword arguments to be passed to the called function type_expr (Optional[Any]): an optional type annotation representing the Python type the output of this node will have. Returns: The newly created and inserted ``call_function`` node. .. note:: The same insertion point and type expression rules apply for this method as :meth:`Graph.create_node`. """ return self.create_node('call_function', the_function, args, kwargs, type_expr=type_expr)
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def node_copy(self, node: Node, arg_transform: Callable[[Node], 'Argument'] = lambda x: x) -> Node: """ Copy a node from one graph into another. ``arg_transform`` needs to transform arguments from the graph of node to the graph of self. Example:: # Copying all the nodes in `g` into `new_graph` g : torch.fx.Graph = ... new_graph = torch.fx.graph() value_remap = {} for node in g.nodes: value_remap[node] = new_graph.node_copy(node, lambda n : value_remap[n]) Args: node (Node): The node to copy into ``self``. arg_transform (Callable[[Node], Argument]): A function that transforms ``Node`` arguments in node's ``args`` and ``kwargs`` into the equivalent argument in ``self``. In the simplest case, this should retrieve a value out of a table mapping Nodes in the original graph to ``self``. """ args = map_arg(node.args, arg_transform) kwargs = map_arg(node.kwargs, arg_transform) assert isinstance(args, tuple) assert isinstance(kwargs, dict) result_node = self.create_node(node.op, node.target, args, kwargs, node.name, node.type) result_node.meta = copy.copy(node.meta) return result_node
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def output(self, result: 'Argument', type_expr: Optional[Any] = None): """ Insert an ``output`` ``Node`` into the ``Graph``. An ``output`` node represents a ``return`` statement in Python code. ``result`` is the value that should be returned. Args: result (Argument): The value to be returned. type_expr (Optional[Any]): an optional type annotation representing the Python type the output of this node will have. .. note:: The same insertion point and type expression rules apply for this method as ``Graph.create_node``. """ return self.create_node(op='output', target='output', args=(result,), type_expr=type_expr)
def _target_to_str(self, target : Target) -> str: if callable(target): op = target.__name__ else: assert isinstance(target, str) op = target if _is_magic(op): op = op[2:-2] op = _snake_case(op) return op
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def python_code( self, root_module: str, *, verbose: bool = False, include_stride: bool = False, include_device: bool = False ) -> PythonCode: """ Turn this ``Graph`` into valid Python code. Args: root_module (str): The name of the root module on which to look-up qualified name targets. This is usually 'self'. Returns: A PythonCode object, consisting of two fields: src: the Python source code representing the object globals: a dictionary of global names in `src` -> the objects that they reference. """ # NOTE: [Graph Namespaces] # # There are two types of symbols in generated Python source code: # locals and globals. # Locals are locally defined by the output of a node in the Graph. # Globals are references to external objects, like functions or types. # # When generating Python code, we need to make sure to name things # appropriately. In particular: # - All names should be unique, to avoid weird shadowing bugs. # - These names need to be consistent, e.g. a object should always be # referenced by the same name. # # To do this, we create a new namespace just for this source. All names # that get printed must come from this namespace. # # Why can't we re-use node.name? Because it was generated within the # namespace `self._graph_namespace`. In order to provide uniqueness # over both locals (node.name) *and* globals, we create a completely # new namespace to put all identifiers in. namespace = _Namespace() # Override Node's repr to generate a valid name within our namespace. # Since repr() is designed to produce a valid Python expression, it # makes sense to re-use it. This way, it's easy to print something like # Tuple[Node, Node] by simply calling repr() on it. Node's __repr__ is # implemented cooperatively to allow this. def node_repr(n: Node): return namespace.create_name(n.name, n) @contextmanager def override_node_repr(graph: Graph): orig_repr_fns = {} for node in graph.nodes: orig_repr_fns[node] = node._repr_fn node._repr_fn = node_repr try: yield None finally: # restore the original repr functions for node in graph.nodes: node._repr_fn = orig_repr_fns[node] with override_node_repr(self): return self._python_code( root_module, namespace, verbose=verbose, include_stride=include_stride, include_device=include_device )
def _python_code( self, root_module: str, namespace: _Namespace, *, verbose: bool = False, include_stride: bool = False, include_device: bool = False ) -> PythonCode: return self._codegen._gen_python_code( self.nodes, root_module, namespace, verbose=verbose, include_stride=include_stride, include_device=include_device ) def __str__(self) -> str: """ Return a human-readable (not machine-readable) string representation of this Graph """ placeholder_names : List[str] = [] # This is a one-element array just so ``format_node`` can modify the closed # over value maybe_return_typename : List[str] = [''] node_strs = [node.format_node(placeholder_names) for node in self.nodes] param_str = ', '.join(placeholder_names) s = f'graph({param_str}){maybe_return_typename[0]}:' for node_str in node_strs: if node_str: s += '\n ' + node_str return s
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def print_tabular(self): """ Prints the intermediate representation of the graph in tabular format. Note that this API requires the ``tabulate`` module to be installed. """ try: from tabulate import tabulate except ImportError: print("`print_tabular` relies on the library `tabulate`, " "which could not be found on this machine. Run `pip " "install tabulate` to install the library.") raise node_specs = [[n.op, n.name, n.target, n.args, n.kwargs] for n in self.nodes] print(tabulate(node_specs, headers=['opcode', 'name', 'target', 'args', 'kwargs']))
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def lint(self): """ Runs various checks on this Graph to make sure it is well-formed. In particular: - Checks Nodes have correct ownership (owned by this graph) - Checks Nodes appear in topological order - If this Graph has an owning GraphModule, checks that targets exist in that GraphModule """ # Check topo order def check_arg(arg : Node, n : Optional[Node] = None) -> None: context_str = f' of Node \'{n}\' ' if n else ' ' if arg.graph is not self: raise RuntimeError(f'Argument \'{arg}\'{context_str}does not belong to this Graph, ' f'but was used as an argument! If you are copying nodes from another graph, make ' f'sure to use ``arg_transform`` on node_copy() to remap values\n{self}') if arg not in seen_values: raise RuntimeError(f'Argument \'{arg}\'{context_str}was used before it has been ' f'defined! Please check that Nodes in the graph are topologically ordered\n{self}') seen_names : Set[str] = set() seen_values : Set[Node] = set() for node in self.nodes: if node.op not in ['placeholder', 'call_method', 'call_module', 'call_function', 'get_attr', 'output']: raise RuntimeError(f'Node {node} had unknown opcode {node.op}!') if node.graph is not self: raise RuntimeError(f'Node \'{node}\' does not belong to this Graph!') if node not in self._find_nodes_lookup_table: raise RuntimeError(f"Node '{node}' is not added to the side table") map_arg(node.args, lambda arg: check_arg(arg, node)) map_arg(node.kwargs, lambda arg: check_arg(arg, node)) seen_values.add(node) if node.name in seen_names: raise RuntimeError(f'Node redefined name {node.name}!') seen_names.add(node.name) # Check targets are legit if self.owning_module: for node in self.nodes: if node.op == 'call_function': if not callable(node.target): raise ValueError(f'Node {node} target {node.target} has type {torch.typename(node.target)} but ' 'a Callable is expected') else: if not isinstance(node.target, str): raise ValueError(f'Node {node} target {node.target} has type {torch.typename(node.target)} but ' 'a str is expected') if node.op in ['get_attr', 'call_module']: target_atoms = node.target.split('.') m_itr = self.owning_module for i, atom in enumerate(target_atoms): new_m_itr = getattr(m_itr, atom, None) seen_qualname = '.'.join(target_atoms[:i]) if new_m_itr is None: raise RuntimeError(f'Node {node} target {node.target} references nonexistent attribute ' f'{atom} of {seen_qualname}') if (node.op == "call_module" and not isinstance(new_m_itr, torch.nn.Module)): raise RuntimeError(f'Node {node} target {node.target} {atom} of {seen_qualname} does ' 'not reference an nn.Module') elif (node.op == "get_attr" and not isinstance(new_m_itr, torch.nn.Module) and not isinstance(new_m_itr, torch.nn.Parameter) and atom not in m_itr._buffers): warnings.warn(f'Node {node} target {node.target} {atom} of {seen_qualname} does ' 'not reference an nn.Module, nn.Parameter, or buffer, which is ' 'what \'get_attr\' Nodes typically target') else: m_itr = new_m_itr
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=True) def eliminate_dead_code(self): """ Remove all dead code from the graph, based on each node's number of users, and whether the nodes have any side effects. The graph must be topologically sorted before calling. Returns: bool: Whether the graph was changed as a result of the pass. Example: Before dead code is eliminated, `a` from `a = x + 1` below has no users and thus can be eliminated from the graph without having an effect. .. code-block:: python def forward(self, x): a = x + 1 return x + self.attr_1 After dead code is eliminated, `a = x + 1` has been removed, and the rest of `forward` remains. .. code-block:: python def forward(self, x): return x + self.attr_1 .. warning:: Dead code elimination has some heuristics to avoid removing side-effectful nodes (see Node.is_impure) but in general coverage is very bad, so you should assume that this method is not sound to call unless you know that your FX graph consists entirely of functional operations. """ # Lint the graph first to make sure its topologically sorted, otherwise # DCE below will not behave as expected. self.lint() # Reverse iterate so that when we remove a node, any nodes used as an # input to that node have an updated user count that no longer reflects # the removed node. changed = False for node in reversed(self.nodes): if not node.is_impure() and len(node.users) == 0: self.erase_node(node) changed = True return changed
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=False) def set_codegen(self, codegen: CodeGen): self._codegen = codegen
[docs] @compatibility(is_backward_compatible=False) def on_generate_code( self, make_transformer: Callable[[Optional[TransformCodeFunc]], TransformCodeFunc] ): """Register a transformer function when python code is generated Args: make_transformer (Callable[[Optional[TransformCodeFunc]], TransformCodeFunc]): a function that returns a code transformer to be registered. This function is called by `on_generate_code` to obtain the code transformer. This function is also given as its input the currently registered code transformer (or None if nothing is registered), in case it is not desirable to overwrite it. This is useful to chain code transformers together. Returns: a context manager that when used in a `with` statement, to automatically restore the previously registered code transformer. Example: .. code-block:: python gm: fx.GraphModule = ... # This is a code transformer we want to register. This code # transformer prepends a pdb import and trace statement at the very # beginning of the generated torch.fx code to allow for manual # debugging with the PDB library. def insert_pdb(body): return ["import pdb; pdb.set_trace()\\n", *body] # Registers `insert_pdb`, and overwrites the current registered # code transformer (given by `_` to the lambda): gm.graph.on_generate_code( lambda _: insert_pdb ) # Or alternatively, registers a code transformer which first # runs `body` through existing registered transformer, then # through `insert_pdb`: gm.graph.on_generate_code( lambda current_trans: ( lambda body: insert_pdb( current_trans(body) if current_trans else body ) ) ) gm.recompile() gm(*inputs) # drops into pdb This function can also be used as a context manager, with the benefit to automatically restores the previously registered code transformer: .. code-block:: python # ... continue from previous example with gm.graph.on_generate_code(lambda _: insert_pdb): # do more stuff with `gm`... gm.recompile() gm(*inputs) # drops into pdb # now previous code transformer is restored (but `gm`'s code with pdb # remains - that means you can run `gm` with pdb here too, until you # run next `recompile()`). """ on_gen_code_old = self._codegen._body_transformer self._codegen._body_transformer = make_transformer(on_gen_code_old) @contextlib.contextmanager def on_generate_code_context_manager(): try: yield finally: self._codegen._body_transformer = on_gen_code_old return on_generate_code_context_manager()
reflectable_magic_methods = { 'add': '{} + {}', 'sub': '{} - {}', 'mul': '{} * {}', 'floordiv': '{} // {}', 'truediv': '{} / {}', 'div': '{} / {}', 'mod': '{} % {}', 'pow': '{} ** {}', 'lshift': '{} << {}', 'rshift': '{} >> {}', 'and_': '{} & {}', 'or_': '{} | {}', 'xor': '{} ^ {}', 'getitem': '{}[{}]', 'matmul': '{} @ {}', } magic_methods = dict({ 'eq': '{} == {}', 'ne': '{} != {}', 'lt': '{} < {}', 'gt': '{} > {}', 'le': '{} <= {}', 'ge': '{} >= {}', 'pos': '+{}', 'neg': '-{}', 'invert': '~{}'}, **reflectable_magic_methods) inplace_methods = { 'iadd': '{} += {}', 'iand': '{} &= {}', 'ifloordiv': '{} //= {}', 'ilshift': '{} <<= {}', 'imod': '{} %= {}', 'imul': '{} *= {}', 'imatmul': '{} @= {}', 'ior': '{} |= {}', 'ipow': '{} **= {}', 'irshift': '{} >>= {}', 'isub': '{} -= {}', 'itruediv': '{} /= {}', 'ixor': '{} ^= {}', 'setitem': '{}[{}] = {}', }

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